Monday, February 14, 2022

TV Review: The Witcher Season Two (2021)

The Witcher Season Two (2021) created for television by Lauren Schmidt from the novels by Andrzej Sapkowski

For my review of Season One, go here.

Geralt of Rivia (Henry Cavill) is back and taking on the greatest quest of his life--being a father figure to Ciri (Freya Allen). The role has been foisted on him by Destiny, so he feels a strong obligation. Though she's a princess from the north, Ciri wants to train as a fighter and maybe become a Witcher like Geralt. Her only problem is the chaos magic in her that she can't really control. They retreat to a secret compound where the other Witchers live. She trains while Geralt glowers. Her magic problem could be solved by Geralt's friend and lover Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) but she's off in a different part of The Continent dealing with her own problems. She's lost her magic powers in a massive battle between powerful factions. She is not sure how to get her powers back. Will their paths eventually cross? And where is the bard Jaskier (Joey Batey), a fun character from the first season?

This second season starts off with a very sombre tone and is full of a lot of political machinations that make the story drag a bit. Some of the plot revelations come off as unconvincing leaps of logic or knowledge by the characters. Ciri's training for combat seems a bit out of place though it does let them show off an American Ninja Warrior-style training course at the compound, lightening up the bleak tone. The sense of humor gets stronger when Jaskier makes a surprise appearance in a middle episode and then thankfully sticks around for the rest of the show. Even so, the show takes itself a bit too seriously this time around. Of course there's a cliffhanger ending to entice viewers into watching another season.

Mildly recommended.

As I write (February 2022), this is only available streaming on Netflix.

Friday, February 11, 2022

Movie Review: Goldeneye (1995)

GoldenEye (1995) directed by Martin Campbell

Pierce Brosnan begins his James Bond career with this exciting, over-the-top story of Bond foiling a plan by the Russians. The Cold War is long over but they make such fine bad guys that I guess the producers couldn't resist. The Russian military is in cahoots with a corrupt Russian business that's planning to use an electro-magnetic pulse devise (codenamed "Goldeneye') to cause havoc. The plan's details are not revealed right away. The company even destroys the secret base where Goldeneye is run. Luckily, the Russians built two devices. What will the bad guys do with the second weapon? And what about the cute Russian programmer (Izabella Scorupco) who managed to escape?

Judi Dench also debuts as M, the head of Bond's secret service division. She's just as tough as her predecessor and rightly accuses Bond of being an "aging, misogynistic dinosaur." Bond takes the criticism like any other--it barely has any effect. He and this film keep to the same tactics: spectacular stunts and actions sequences (the chase in St. Petersburg where Bond is driving a tank and the bad guys have a car stretches credibility quite far), exotic locales, beautiful women with whom Bond fools around, tech gadgets from Q branch that would never work in real life (maybe the exploding pen, but definitely not the watch with a laser cutter), and a fabulous theme song (thanks, Tina Turner) over an aging, misogynistic opening credits sequence. 

The movie is typical of most of the Bond films. It's entertaining escapist fun, making it easier to overlook Bond's amoral behavior and the semi-cartoonish tone (though it's not as frivolous as the Roger Moore films, which are enjoyable in their own way).

Mildly recommended--quintessential mindless popcorn fun that so much of the Bond franchise delivers.

Thursday, February 10, 2022

Book Review: Slam Dunk Vols. 1 & 2 by Takehiko Inoue

Slam Dunk Volume 1 by Takehiko Inoue

Hanamichi Sakuragi has just moved up to high school. He leaves behind a long list of romantic rejections. He also brings his hot-headed attitudes (he is a red-head), sometimes losing his temper and headbutting fellow students he finds annoying. In high school, a girl named Haruko likes the looks of him. He thinks she's cute. The only problem is she is totally into basketball and thinks that Sakuragi will be a great player for the school's team. Sakuragi is in good shape but doesn't play athletics. And the last girl he was interested in turned him down for a guy on the basketball team! He tries out for the team, doing anything and everything (including polishing the court floor) in order to get on the team. Sakuragi thinks the team captain is a gorilla and has a bit of a disrespectful attitude...until he learns that the captain is Haruko's big brother.

The story follows a familiar problem--having a hard time fitting in at high school. Sakuragi is a little bit unlikeable as he has trouble managing his temper and dealing with his classmates. The humor is fairly good and the high school drama is well done, so I will try some more of this series.

Recommended.

Slam Dunk Volume 2 by Takehiko Inoue

High school freshman Hanamichi Sakuragi faces a new challenge to his basketball ambitions. He wants to join the team to impress cute girl Haruko but team captain (and Haruko's brother) Takenori is more interested in the new first year talent and potential star Kaede Rukawa. Haruko has her eye on Rukawa. Sakuragi would like nothing more than Rukawa to lose to Takenori. Also, he'd like to play on the first-years-versus-starters game that will pit Rukawa against Takenori. If that was not enough drama, the head of the school's judo team tries to recruit Sakuragi. He's very persistent and also thinks the judo team will win nationals before the basketball team.

It's another exciting outing for Sakuragi. The manga acknowledges Sakuragi's personal problems and shortcomings in a light-hearted style that makes this fun to read. The drama feels a bit exaggerated though that's typical in manga (and often in good storytelling).

Recommended.

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Book Review: 50 Questions on the Natural Law by Charles Rice

50 Questions on the Natural Law: What It Is and Why We Need It by Charles Rice

Having taught about the subject in Notre Dame Law School, Charles Rice has taken common, persistent questions from his students as a method for explaining the Natural Law. The issue is significant today because of the many different approaches to jurisprudence in America. The main champion of natural law thinking is the Roman Catholic Church, so opponents are suspect of the theory. Other, more neutral thinkers (students come in all sorts) may be uninformed and curious about the topic.

Rice starts with basic and broad topics, those mentioned in the subtitle of the book. The theory dates back before the beginning of the church, mainly in ancient Greece and Rome, though elements can be found elsewhere across the globe. The reason for its ubiquity is because natural law is embedded in human nature. We have a semi-instinctual sense for what is right and wrong because we are individual persons who are part of communities. Obligations toward the community and toward one another come along with expectations from the community and from one another. To avoid the capricious whims of rulers, laws need to be crafted and written down so that they can be applied to all--all peoples in all situations at all times. Natural law depends on an understanding of human persons and human community.

The Catholic Church has a long tradition of reflecting on the nature of persons. In resolving the various controversies about Jesus Christ's true nature (How is Jesus both man and God? How do the two natures interact in the one person? What sort of union is there/can there be between the human and the divine? Etc.) and about the nature of the Trinity (How can there be three persons in one being? Etc.). A theological culmination happened with Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican theologian from the thirteenth century who integrated much of the Church's theological reflections with the newly rediscovered systematic philosophy of Aristotle. His legal reflections take in the insights of what it means to be a person, what it means to be in a community, and what it means for humans to be made in the image and likeness of God. His legal theory (which the Church has largely adopted) looks at divine law and human law, how they interact and how they are made explicit in written divine law (revelation) and written human law. 

The text moves through these general notions, eventually working down to more specific issues like the role of the Church in legal matters, the need for an authentic understanding of human nature, and the need to contextualize legal systems within the larger framework of human reality, i.e. as subjects not of just the state, but also of God. Rice also gets into specifics about capitalism vs. socialism, right to life issues, marriage issues, and other details.

The text is interesting and engaging. It's not bogged down with technical detail and the sort of arcane language that will intimidate general readers. Rice is very honest and clear in presenting his arguments. Overall, he makes a great and persuasive presentation. The main drawbacks are the book's contemporary assessment of American jurisprudence and the last handful of questions. A lot has happened in the thirty years since the 1993 publication date. The concerns over abortion and euthanasia have shifted. I'm sure if the book was written in the 2020s a few questions would be dedicated to the church's positions on gender dysphoria and on racism. The final questions in the book have a lot of long quotes from church documents and theologians, making it feel more "cut and paste" than original authorship. Otherwise, it's a brilliant work.

Highly recommended--this is a great introduction to Natural Law theory.


Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Game Review: Exit The Game: The Gate Between Worlds by Kosmos

Exit The Game: The Gate Between Worlds designed by Inka & Markus Brand and Ralph Querfurth and published by Kosmos

In the latest innovation for an Exit The Game game, The Gate Between Worlds features only one riddle card! The typical game has a deck of riddle cards that are drawn one by one as the game goes on. This game uses small posters that have clues and puzzles on them. There's still plenty of cutting and writing to do, just on the posters, not on the cards. Some other bits like rubber bands are part of fun, creative puzzles. The decoder disk is the titular gate between worlds and stands up!

Components in the game

The theme of the game has the players journeying through a gate much like the Stargate to many fantastic worlds. The goal is to get back home through the usual method of solving a variety of puzzles, rotate the gate, and find the codes that unlock one of the new worlds (i.e. one of the posters). The game includes a time element but as usual we ignored that in favor of enjoying solving the puzzles without the stress of rushing through game. That was good because we took a two-week hiatus between play sessions! We remembered enough that restarting was not hard.

The puzzles were fun and challenging. Most of them are more mechanical or manipulative than in other games, where there's a lot of decoding. The posters had multiple uses with little details that came in handy later in the play. The game makes good use of the standing solution wheel. As usual (for us), one of the puzzles didn't make sense and we had to use the hint cards. But overall, it was engaging and not hard to come up with the ideas that the game creators had in mind.

This game was another winner from the series. We are amazed that the makers are able to come up with new and creative puzzles.

Highly recommended.

Monday, February 7, 2022

Geocaching January 2022

We started our new year's geocaching adventures with a couple of finds on Kent Island, which is at the other end of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge from Annapolis, Maryland. 

The first find was at the southern end of the island, a cache called MATAPEAKE TRAIL: Diet Pepsi vs Roman Coke??? The unusual name is based on the name of the town, Romancoke. We looked for a while at the obvious spot that was wrong, eventually expanding our search until we made the find. The views of the Chesakpeake Bay from the little park are very nice.

Blogger, son, and brother

View from the park

View of the park

Neither the cache page nor the signs at the park explained the unusual name.

Our second find was CAM 2007 - Kent Island. It's located by the Matapeake Park club house which has been undergoing restoration for over twenty years. We didn't go inside, just headed for the beach.

The club house

Grandpa ringing in the new year

The cache is off one of the trails and not to hard to find with minimal bushwhacking. The beach is nice, even in January, and has a good view of the Bay Bridge, which does not photograph well.

A very long bridge

On an errand run, I found Mondo's On Every Corner #: Learning Curve. It's a standard hide that's near a university extension.

You can probably guess the hiding spot from the photo

I also found About Eye Level, which was a tougher find, mostly because the slope of the hiding area. I parked below and had a short climb into the wooded area. I wished I had a bag to Cache-In-Trash-Out. I'll be more prepared next time!

There's more slope that you can see

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Book Review: Usagi Yojimbo Book 10 by Stan Sakai

Usagi Yojimbo Book 10: The Brink of Life and Death by Stan Sakai

More stories of the anthropomorphic wandering warrior, Usagi Yojimbo, through feudal Japan!

Origin Tale--This is a very brief overview of Usagi's origin as a ronin (wandering, lordless samurai), reviewing his main allies and enemies. It reads like a "Previously on..." segment that TV shows use to update viewers on important bits from recent episodes. 

Kaiso--Usagi's wanderings bring him to a seaside town where he runs into a local farmer...a farmer of kaiso (seaweed)!The farmer has had trouble with a neighbor to the north. He thinks the neighbor has been poaching seaweed late at night. Usagi learns a bit about the process of making nori (the seaweed sheets used for sushi) and helps resolve the dispute with the neighbor. The story is nicely plotted and tells enough about the seaweed business to be interesting.

A Meeting of Strangers--Usagi is having a meal in a tavern when another ronin comes in. She orders a drink but can't pay for it. She puts on a tough act; Usagi gives the coin needed to pay for her drink. Once she leaves, she's attacked by mercenaries who want a bounty on her. She has no trouble dealing with them. Usagi leaves separately and becomes the target of other assassins. In the way of the samurai, she repays her debt to Usagi. The story is simple and makes a nice introduction for Inazuma. Maybe she'll show up again later?

Black Soul--In a very creepy story, three thugs show up at a farmer's house demanding food and valuables. The farmer is a grandfather with his only granddaughter. The thugs get violent, drawing the evil Jei, who slaughters them and burns the house. The granddaughter, with nothing left (her parents died long ago), follows after Jei, probably the creepiest part of the story. The story goes quickly and seems like a set-up for future adventures. No Usagi in the story, though.

Noodles--Usagi runs into an old friend, Kitsune. She's a street entertainer with a penchant for petty theft because "a girl has to do what she can to get by." Her latest scheme involves a partner--the mute soba seller she calls "Noodles." She robs a house then hides in his portable soba stand. The only problem is the local town has a much larger crime wave going on. The local cop is a bit corrupt and needs to make an arrest or lose his job. He decides to pin the blame on Noodles, with tragic consequences. This is a fairly mature and intense story that is highly satisfying.

The Wrath of the Tangled Skein--Usagi finds shelter at an inn that has trouble. The daughter of the innkeeper traveled through a haunted woods called The Tangled Skein and is now sick. Suspecting demonic possession, a Bonze (Buddhist priest) is called for an exorcism. Usagi patrols outside with the hired guards (who aren't very useful) while the Bonze works inside. The story gives a little mythology and a lot of action.

The Bonze's Story--The tragic backstory of the Bonze is told here. He previously served with a lord, protecting his lord's son and his own son on a pilgrimage. Just before the destination, tragedy struck. Circumstances, or maybe karma, gave the unhappy ending to the tale.

Bats, The Cat, and The Rabbit--Usagi has a run in with the Komori Ninja, a tribe of bats who are always looking to cause harm. They are on the trail of Chizu, a ninja in her own right with a secret document. Usagi runs across her at a temple and they are forced to fight the Komori together. Usagi behaves honorably (as usual) among the thieves. The ending is a bit of a surprise in a very satisfying way.

The Chrysanthemum Pass--Usagi meets a wandering merchant who sells medicine along his route. Usagi's path overlaps the merchant, so they travel together. Meanwhile, a lord is traveling to a meeting with the other lords. Assassins have been hired to take the lord down. Usagi doesn't know this but the medicine guy is aware since he is part of the murderous conspiracy.The set up makes for a nicely dramatic tale.

Lightning Strikes Twice--Inazuma shows up again as she is pursued by assassins. Usagi discovers her telling her life story to a small group in a wayside shed. Her father wanted her to marry an older man (even older than her father!) but she loved a poor, young samurai. She ran away with the younger man but life was hard since times were peaceful. She trained as a samurai so she could perform as a novelty act on the streets. He gambled away their earnings, eventually getting in trouble with a corrupt dealer. She avenged her husband's death. The family of the dealer is still trying to kill her. It's a familiar tale but still told with aplomb and explains why she is on the run.

The book ends with some commentary by Sakai on the stories, explaining the background details concerning Japanese traditions, myths, and folklore. There's also a gallery of covers Sakai made for various publications of these stories. The short biography of him features a picture of him riding a Segway!

Highly recommended--Sakai is a great storyteller and his art works well with the stories.